Apparently David West is the latest NBA veteran set to join the Warriors at a bargain price in hopes of landing a championship ring.

West, a 6-foot-9 forward who played for San Antonio last season, will sign a one-year deal with Golden State for $1.55 million, the veteran’s minimum, according to multiple reports. Zaza Pachulia agreed to terms with the Warriors on Monday for $2.9 million.

West, 35, a two-time all-star, left some $11 million on the table last season when he opted out of his contract with Indiana to try to get a title with the Spurs. He averaged a career-low 7.1 points per game and the Spurs lost to Oklahoma City in the Western Conference semifinals.

The 13-year pro has never won a title. He averaged almost 20 points per game for New Orleans from 2006-11. For his career, West has averaged 14.8 points and 6.9 rebounds.

Contracts can’t be signed until Thursday.

Mavericks: Dirk Nowitzki’s new contract will give the Dallas forward a chance spend 20 seasons with the only franchise for which he has ever played. The Mavericks and Nowitzki have reached agreement on a two-year, $40 million contract, a person with knowledge of the deal told The Associated Press. Nowitzki will have a player option in the second year.

The person also said the Mavericks have agreed to a two-year, $6 million contract with free agent guard Seth Curry, the younger brother of two-time MVP Stephen Curry.

At $20 million per season, Nowitzki’s deal is a significant raise for the 38-year-old, who opted out of the final year of a three-year, $25 million deal.

Hawks: Dwight Howard was described as humble and showed a willingness to change and be coached in his free agency meeting with the Hawks last week.

Time will tell. The Hawks agreed to a three-year, $70.5 million contract with the eight-time All-Star center. The move, coupled with the re-signing of their own free-agent Kent Bazemore, was part of the reason the team parted ways with Al Horford.

Howard had issues upon leaving the Magic after eight seasons. His one season with the Lakers left much to be desired. In the past three seasons with the Rockets, the pairing with James Harden proved not a good fit. Howard opted out of the final year of his contract with the Rockets.

Heat: Dwyane Wade’s future with the Miami Heat remains up in the air — and, yes, there’s a chance he could end up landing alongside his close friend LeBron James in Cleveland. Wade, 34, and the Heat remained at an impasse in negotiations and the relationship between the 12-time All-Star and the organization he’s won three championships with is as strained as it’s ever been, according to sources on both sides.

Wade has not accepted the two-year, $40 million offer Miami dangled Monday (it includes a player option that allows Wade to opt out in 2017-18 when the salary cap rises from $94 million to a reported $106 million), he is seeking more in negotiations, the Miami Herald learned.

Though the world champions appear to be out of cap space and can only initially offer Wade the team’s $3.48 million midlevel taxpayer exception, Kevin Durant’s decision to head to Golden State could push the Cavaliers and James to get creative to bring in Wade and form a Big Four along with Kyrie Irving and Kevin Love.

Lakers: Until a couple of months ago, Brandon Ingram’s new locker at the Los Angeles Lakers’ training complex was occupied by Kobe Bryant. The 18-year-old rookie sees the daunting symbolism in literally taking the place of the most prolific scorer in franchise history, and he greets it with a smile.

“I did see where my locker was, and I definitely knew it was Kobe’s locker,” Ingram said. “(General manager) Mitch (Kupchak) told me I had some big shoes to fill when I came in here, but I liked it. I like the pressure that’s on me right now. Of course it’s going to motivate me to do good things on the court. It’s all good pressure for me.”

Ingram put on those shoes for the first time Tuesday at a practice for the Lakers’ Las Vegas summer league team.

Spurs-Jazz: A person with knowledge of the deal says San Antonio has traded Boris Diaw to Utah for point guard Olivier Hanlan. TheVertical.com first reported the deal. The 33-year-old Diaw, a key member of the Spurs’ 2014 championship team, averaged 6.4 points, 3.1 rebounds and 2.3 assists last season.

76ers: A person with knowledge of the negotiations says Philadelphia has agreed to terms with guard Gerald Henderson on a two-year deal worth $18 million. Henderson averaged 8.7 points in his first season with Portland. He spent the first six seasons of his career in Charlotte before being traded to the Trail Blazers.

Hornets: Charlotte has added depth in free agency. Center Roy Hibbert and point guard Ramon Sessions agreed to terms with the Hornets, a person with knowledge of the situation said. Hibbert will receive one-year deal worth $5 million and Sessions will get a two-year deal worth $12.3 million with a team option for the second season.

Magic: Orlando is finalizing a trade to send point guard Shabazz Napier to the Trail Blazers for cash.

The Orlando Sentinel, Atlanta Journal-Constitution and Miami Herald contributed to this report.